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Solve at MIT 2017

Annual Flagship Meeting
Solve at MIT is the annual gathering of Solve’s global community of social impact leaders. Over the course of three days, you’ll meet more than 500 world-class leaders in the social impact space, including representatives from Solve Members such as Starbucks, Nike, HP, Capital One, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,...

Solve at MIT 2017

Solve at MIT is the annual gathering of Solve’s global community of social impact leaders. Over the course of three days, you’ll meet more than 500 world-class leaders in the social impact space, including representatives from Solve Members such as Starbucks, Nike, HP, Capital One, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Save the Children. You’ll also connect with the social entrepreneurs behind cutting-edge solutions to the world’s biggest problems. Solve at MIT is three inspiring days of partnerships, networking, and connections—all on the MIT campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts on May 12-14.

If you’re interested in attending, find out how you can become a Member of Solve.

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Technological advancements such as the steam engine, washing machine, and electric lighting have historically created significant global opportunities and progress for both individuals and businesses. While technological innovations have increased jobs, productivity, and incomes, they have also created negative disruptions—for example, eliminating jobs in agriculture—and many benefits have not been realized equally by all people. As the pace of innovation continues to increase with further automation, robotics, and artificial intelligence, the critical question becomes whether technology today is destroying more opportunity, jobs, and livelihoods than it creates, and whether this is a temporary or permanent trend. How can businesses, governments, and individuals limit the harmful disruption caused by technological advancement and further amplify their benefits?

Join Solve for this opening plenary as our panelists debate whether technology today is creating or destroying opportunity and equality. In addition, the panel will consider:

  • How can we continue to invest in technological advancements, especially the ones that solve big, bold, global challenges—such as climate change and food security—without critically disrupting jobs and livelihoods?
  • How can the benefits of new technology, such as genomics and big data, be enjoyed by all?
  • How can businesses and governments encourage technological innovation and create programs that limit negative disruptions to the labor market, and even increase the employability and wages of workers—particularly for those in sectors most at risk of automation?
  • What are the ethical and moral implications that businesses, governments, and consumers need to consider for their innovations?

Featured Speakers

Headshot of L. Rafael Reif

L. Rafael Reif

Headshot of Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw

Headshot of Ash Carter

Ash Carter

Headshot of Yo-Yo Ma

Yo-Yo Ma

Session Speakers

Headshot of Alex Amouyel

Alex Amouyel

Headshot of Erik Brynjolfsson

Erik Brynjolfsson

Headshot of Rodney  Brooks

Rodney Brooks

Headshot of Ina Fried

Ina Fried

Solvers

Headshot of Hila Azadzoy

Hila Azadzoy

Network with Solvers and Solve community members.

From ancient Rome to present-day Nairobi, cities have served as hubs of global progress. They account for nearly 70 percent of the world’s current GDP, and offer opportunities to foster resource efficiency and economic development. Urbanization, however, presents significant challenges—for example, nearly 29 percent of city dwellers worldwide currently live in slums, typically lacking basic services such as clean water and adequate housing. If we want to eliminate urban slums while greening our skyscrapers, or reduce resource inefficiency while improving infrastructure and basic service delivery, then we must revolutionize how cities are designed, rebuilt, and planned.

Join Solve for this plenary as our panelists discuss how businesses, governments, and individuals alike can rethink conventional urban-design models and increase resilient and smart city planning efforts by:

  • Leveraging technology to mitigate climate change—for example, reducing greenhouse gas emissions from buildings
  • Improving modes of transportation for all city dwellers, and ensuring that they are clean, reliable, accessible, and affordable
  • Increasing investment for solutions that deliver basic services to slum and informal settlements, such as clean water, sanitation, and education

Session Speakers

Headshot of Aziza Chaouni

Aziza Chaouni

Headshot of Kent Larson

Kent Larson

Headshot of Thierry Déau

Thierry Déau

Headshot of Brenna  Nan Schneider

Brenna Nan Schneider

Headshot of Olajumoke Adenowo

Olajumoke Adenowo

Headshot of Andrew Chung

Andrew Chung

Headshot of E. Denise Simmons

E. Denise Simmons

Solvers

Headshot of Malena Gonzalez

Malena Gonzalez

How can individuals and corporations manage and reduce their carbon contributions?

By 2050, the world must double its energy and food supply to meet demand generated in large part by a growing increasingly prosperous population. We need to act now to balance increased production and consumption with the urgent steps necessary to monitor, manage, and mitigate climate change and its associated ecological and environmental risks. The Solve community aims to help fill some of the acute gaps in thinking, implementation, and discovery, which exist in the effort to solve the world’s most pressing challenges. To help jumpstart additive solutions to manage our global emissions crisis, participants in this working group will explore how the Solve community can seek to generate and implement solutions to:

  • Generate, test, and deploy carbon removal technologies that could be implemented by individuals or corporations, at point or at scale
  • Suggest implementable ‘bottom-up’ carbon pricing approaches for communities and businesses
  • Propose large-scale individual-level and business-level solutions to significantly reduce emissions

Featured Speakers

Headshot of Ernest J. Moniz

Ernest J. Moniz

Solvers

Headshot of Ed Cullinan

Ed Cullinan

Headshot of Kyle Kornack

Kyle Kornack

Headshot of Simon Black

Simon Black

Headshot of Mike Hands

Mike Hands

Headshot of Kevin Kung

Kevin Kung

Headshot of Tim Fitzgerald

Tim Fitzgerald

How can we help people prevent, detect, and manage chronic diseases, especially in resources-limited settings?

We are facing a chronic-disease crisis. Worldwide, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are responsible for 27 million deaths annually, over 75 percent of which occur in low- and middle-income countries. In addition to ending millions of lives, chronic diseases have major economic costs: estimates suggest they will result in tens of trillions of dollars in lost global economic output between 2011 and 2030, and in the U.S. alone, these diseases account for over $600 billion in medical costs each year. 

The Solve community aims to help fill some of the acute gaps in thinking, implementation, and discovery, which exist in the effort to solve the world’s most pressing challenges. To jumpstart thinking, application, and innovation to mitigate chronic disease cost, morbidity, and mortality, participants in this working group will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Suggest chronic disease prevention models that can both reduce cost and improve health outcomes, particularly in low-income and developing country settings
  • Propose innovative strategies for chronic-disease screening, especially to increase early detection
  • Develop low-cost, rapidly-scalable tools and technologies to help patients and caregivers more efficiently and effectively manage chronic-disease burdens

Session Speakers

Headshot of Jeffrey Sturchio

Jeffrey Sturchio

Headshot of Ann Aerts

Ann Aerts

Solvers

Headshot of Gavin  Armstrong

Gavin Armstrong

Headshot of Reza  Yavari

Reza Yavari

Headshot of Abhinav Khare

Abhinav Khare

Headshot of Nirinjan Yee

Nirinjan Yee

Headshot of Shailesh Prithani

Shailesh Prithani

Headshot of Malena Gonzalez

Malena Gonzalez

Headshot of Diego Espinosa

Diego Espinosa

Headshot of Antti Kangas

Antti Kangas

How do we create a more inclusive, productive, and sustainable economic future for all?

While technology has historically created jobs and advance human progress, its impact on today’s economic prosperity and inequality is subject to heated debates. On the one hand, mass automation and machine learning could destroy more jobs than they will ever create. On the other hand, technology increases access to finance, to information, and to learning—all of which are key enablers of economic opportunity.

At Solve, we believe solutions that use technology to generate prosperity for all can come from anywhere. In close partnership with the Inclusive Innovation Challenge, Solve selected some of the competition’s winners to join the community as “Solvers.” In this working group, participants will connect with those Solvers to workshop and partner on scaling solutions that promote economic inclusion, and explore how technology can:

  • Increase underserved communities' access to finance, to information, and to technology
  • Support the workforce in the re-skilling, up-skilling, and lifelong learning necessary to adjust to the rapidly changing needs of our digital societies
  • Reinvent the production process and innovate across supply chains to reinvigorate industries and create new income opportunities

Solvers

Headshot of Brenna  Nan Schneider

Brenna Nan Schneider

Headshot of Augusto Ruiz-Tagle

Augusto Ruiz-Tagle

Headshot of Liisa Petrykowska

Liisa Petrykowska

Headshot of Ella Peinovich

Ella Peinovich

Headshot of Herman Marin

Herman Marin

How can we improve learning outcomes for refugee and displaced young people under 24?

Globally, over 50 million children are refugees or migrants, and account for over 50 percent of refugees worldwide. Providing children and young people under 24 with education throughout their lives as refugees and displaced people is critical: ensuring their education isn’t disrupted is a key step to mitigating the impact of a current crisis and protecting against a future one. During crises, education can provide children with life-saving survival skills and can protect them from violence, exploitation, criminal activity, and disease. In the long term, education can help manage the psychological impacts of conflict and displacement, counter ideas of radicalization and exclusion, and foster alternative social narratives. Throughout, it also improves health outcomes and increases economic development for individuals, families, and countries.

The Solve community aims to help fill some of the acute gaps in thinking, implementation, and discovery, which exist in the effort to solve the world’s most pressing challenges. To help jumpstart additive solutions to guarantee refugee children and displaced youth learn to their highest potential, participants in this working group will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Outline solutions to help increase access to learning—for example, by scaling promising learning technologies
  • Suggest new models, techniques, and concepts that address key barriers to education delivery for students affected by crises
  • Propose tools and strategies to measure, monitor, and achieve quality learning, especially to overcome resource limitations, language barriers, and geographic challenges

Session Speakers

Headshot of Ravi Gurumurthy

Ravi Gurumurthy

Solvers

Headshot of Chrystina Russell

Chrystina Russell

Headshot of Lucrezia Bisignani

Lucrezia Bisignani

Headshot of Mohsin Mohi Ud Din

Mohsin Mohi Ud Din

Headshot of Rama Chakaki

Rama Chakaki

Headshot of Richard R. Rowe

Richard R. Rowe

Headshot of Gail Anderson

Gail Anderson

Headshot of Katie Zaniboni

Katie Zaniboni

Headshot of Hila Azadzoy

Hila Azadzoy

Headshot of Belle Sweeney

Belle Sweeney

How can individuals and corporations manage and reduce their carbon contributions?

By 2050, the world must double its energy and food supply to meet demand generated in large part by a growing increasingly prosperous population. We need to act now to balance increased production and consumption with the urgent steps necessary to monitor, manage, and mitigate climate change and its associated ecological and environmental risks. The Solve community aims to help fill some of the acute gaps in thinking, implementation, and discovery, which exist in the effort to solve the world’s most pressing challenges. To help jumpstart additive solutions to manage our global emissions crisis, participants in this working group will explore how the Solve community can seek to generate and implement solutions to:

  • Generate, test, and deploy carbon removal technologies that could be implemented by individuals or corporations, at point or at scale
  • Suggest implementable ‘bottom-up’ carbon pricing approaches for communities and businesses
  • Propose large-scale individual-level and business-level solutions to significantly reduce emissions

Session Speakers

Headshot of Ian A. Waitz

Ian A. Waitz

Headshot of John Fernández

John Fernández

Solvers

Headshot of Ed Cullinan

Ed Cullinan

Headshot of Kyle Kornack

Kyle Kornack

Headshot of Simon Black

Simon Black

Headshot of Mike Hands

Mike Hands

Headshot of Kevin Kung

Kevin Kung

Headshot of Tim Fitzgerald

Tim Fitzgerald

How can we help people prevent, detect, and manage chronic diseases, especially in resources-limited settings?

We are facing a chronic-disease crisis. Worldwide, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are responsible for 27 million deaths annually, over 75 percent of which occur in low- and middle-income countries. In addition to ending millions of lives, chronic diseases have major economic costs: estimates suggest they will result in tens of trillions of dollars in lost global economic output between 2011 and 2030, and in the U.S. alone, these diseases account for over $600 billion in medical costs each year. 

The Solve community aims to help fill some of the acute gaps in thinking, implementation, and discovery, which exist in the effort to solve the world’s most pressing challenges. To jumpstart thinking, application, and innovation to mitigate chronic disease cost, morbidity, and mortality, participants in this working group will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Suggest chronic disease prevention models that can both reduce cost and improve health outcomes, particularly in low-income and developing country settings
  • Propose innovative strategies for chronic-disease screening, especially to increase early detection
  • Develop low-cost, rapidly-scalable tools and technologies to help patients and caregivers more efficiently and effectively manage chronic-disease burdens

Session Speakers

Headshot of Noubar Afeyan

Noubar Afeyan

Solvers

Headshot of Gavin  Armstrong

Gavin Armstrong

Headshot of Reza  Yavari

Reza Yavari

Headshot of Abhinav Khare

Abhinav Khare

Headshot of Nirinjan Yee

Nirinjan Yee

Headshot of Shailesh Prithani

Shailesh Prithani

Headshot of Malena Gonzalez

Malena Gonzalez

Headshot of Diego Espinosa

Diego Espinosa

Headshot of Antti Kangas

Antti Kangas

How do we create a more inclusive, productive, and sustainable economic future for all?

While technology has historically created jobs and advance human progress, its impact on today’s economic prosperity and inequality is subject to heated debates. On the one hand, mass automation and machine learning could destroy more jobs than they will ever create. On the other hand, technology increases access to finance, to information, and to learning—all of which are key enablers of economic opportunity.

At Solve, we believe solutions that use technology to generate prosperity for all can come from anywhere. In close partnership with the Inclusive Innovation Challenge, Solve selected some of the competition’s winners to join the community as “Solvers.” In this working group, participants will connect with those Solvers to workshop and partner on scaling solutions that promote economic inclusion, and explore how technology can:

  • Increase underserved communities' access to finance, to information, and to technology
  • Support the workforce in the re-skilling, up-skilling, and lifelong learning necessary to adjust to the rapidly changing needs of our digital societies
  • Reinvent the production process and innovate across supply chains to reinvigorate industries and create new income opportunities

Session Speakers

Headshot of Donna Levin

Donna Levin

Headshot of Laxman Narasimhan

Laxman Narasimhan

Solvers

Headshot of Brenna  Nan Schneider

Brenna Nan Schneider

Headshot of Augusto Ruiz-Tagle

Augusto Ruiz-Tagle

Headshot of Liisa Petrykowska

Liisa Petrykowska

Headshot of Ella Peinovich

Ella Peinovich

Headshot of Herman Marin

Herman Marin

How can we improve learning outcomes for refugee and displaced young people under 24?

Globally, over 50 million children are refugees or migrants, and account for over 50 percent of refugees worldwide. Providing children and young people under 24 with education throughout their lives as refugees and displaced people is critical: ensuring their education isn’t disrupted is a key step to mitigating the impact of a current crisis and protecting against a future one. During crises, education can provide children with life-saving survival skills and can protect them from violence, exploitation, criminal activity, and disease. In the long term, education can help manage the psychological impacts of conflict and displacement, counter ideas of radicalization and exclusion, and foster alternative social narratives. Throughout, it also improves health outcomes and increases economic development for individuals, families, and countries.

The Solve community aims to help fill some of the acute gaps in thinking, implementation, and discovery, which exist in the effort to solve the world’s most pressing challenges. To help jumpstart additive solutions to guarantee refugee children and displaced youth learn to their highest potential, participants in this working group will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Outline solutions to help increase access to learning—for example, by scaling promising learning technologies
  • Suggest new models, techniques, and concepts that address key barriers to education delivery for students affected by crises
  • Propose tools and strategies to measure, monitor, and achieve quality learning, especially to overcome resource limitations, language barriers, and geographic challenges

Session Speakers

Headshot of Elizabeth Roscoe

Elizabeth Roscoe

Headshot of Haifa Dia Al-Attia

Haifa Dia Al-Attia

Solvers

Headshot of Chrystina Russell

Chrystina Russell

Headshot of Lucrezia Bisignani

Lucrezia Bisignani

Headshot of Mohsin Mohi Ud Din

Mohsin Mohi Ud Din

Headshot of Rama Chakaki

Rama Chakaki

Headshot of Richard R. Rowe

Richard R. Rowe

Headshot of Gail Anderson

Gail Anderson

Headshot of Katie Zaniboni

Katie Zaniboni

Headshot of Hila Azadzoy

Hila Azadzoy

Headshot of Belle Sweeney

Belle Sweeney

Approximately 3.4 billion people globally live in rural communities, the majority in developing and emerging countries. Rural communities account for 75 percent of the world’s poor, with limited access to basic services including education, health, and finance. Many lack reliable mobile and internet connectivity, and, therefore, critical access to information services. Despite this, rural markets have steadily flourished in countries such as Mexico and South Africa, and many rural parts of Asia have experienced rising wages and increased purchasing power. Further, investing in and boosting the yields and incomes of the 500 million smallholder farmers in the world—the majority of whom are women—are essential to ensure we can feed the growing population, estimated at 10 billion people by 2050. Rural populations are incredibly resilient and resourceful, and, by enabling their talent and ingenuity to flourish, they can themselves create the solutions needed for greater prosperity.

For this plenary, our speakers will explore how businesses, governments, and individuals alike can support innovation in rural communities:

  • Invest in connectivity—boosting mobile and high speed internet coverage to allow rural communities to access information, financial services, and global markets
  • Support smallholder farmers to increase both the yield and nutritional value of their crops, as well as fair market access

Featured Speakers

Headshot of Ursula M. Burns

Ursula M. Burns

Session Speakers

Headshot of Anurudh Ganesan

Anurudh Ganesan

Headshot of Pablo Borquez Schwarzbeck

Pablo Borquez Schwarzbeck

Headshot of Rita Kimani

Rita Kimani

Headshot of Doug Warner

Doug Warner

Headshot of Sanjay Sarma

Sanjay Sarma

Headshot of Linda Henry

Linda Henry

Solvers

Headshot of Kevin Kung

Kevin Kung

Headshot of Liisa Petrykowska

Liisa Petrykowska

Network with Solvers and Solve community members

As traditional research funding sources shrink and become more short term focused, a wide variety of potentially ground breaking research falls outside today’s funding parameters. Researchers without a track record in a given field find it difficult to attract funding, and new ideas without initial results often fail to gain traction.

The Bose Fellows program, now in its fourth year, funds research at MIT that is unable to attract conventional funding. Host Vanu Bose and the Bose fellows will discuss research and approaches to rethink research funding.

  • Vanu Bose, President & CEO, Bose Inc.
  • Polina Ankeeva, Bose Fellow 
  • Angela Belcher, Bose Fellow
  • Jeff Grossman, Bose Fellow
  • Sara Seager, Bose Fellow

Space is limited. Pre-registration is required.


We live and work in increasingly uncertain and tumultuous times. At the same time, it’s harder than ever for organizations to get their ideas across in a crowded content environment. This dinner will discuss how to break through and make an impact in uncertain landscape, sharing case studies from today's content leaders. This dinner will explore what’s new, what’s next, and what’s unknown in 2017.

Space is limited. Pre-registration is required.


Solving the world’s largest and most pressing environmental challenges will require innovative, science-driven interventions that can be easily scaled to maximize impact. New technologies—such as underwater robots that can protect coral reef systems—and mass manufacturing techniques hold the potential to reshape the way scientists and non-profits approach conservation. Hosts Erika and Colin Angle will discuss how we can leverage robotic technology to develop, fund, and enhance environmental non-profits and inspire the next generation of engineers and conservation scientists.

Space is limited. Pre-registration is required.


The global population is aging at an unprecedented pace. By 2050, the number of people over the age of 60 is projected to double, reaching over 2 billion globally and posing serious implications for nearly all sectors of society. As aging populations continue to grow, how can philanthropies cooperate with NGOs, businesses, and governments to design innovative tools and services to address cognitive decline, loneliness, intergenerational relations, free time management and mobility, and related demands?

  • Joseph F. Coughlin, Director, Massachusetts Institute of Technology AgeLab

Space is limited. Pre-registration is required.


Rapid advances in connectivity, artificial intelligence, and deep learning promise to transform the way we prevent, detect, and manage chronic diseases such as diabetes and cancer. How can businesses, governments, researchers, and other innovators come together to leverage these technologies and improve healthcare quality and access globally?

Space is limited. Pre-registration is required.


Our planet is full of bold thinkers and even bolder ideas. Humans today are more inter-connected than ever before, and yet, the ideas and talent of the 7 billion people living on this Earth have been far from utilized to their full potential. Solving the world’s seemingly intractable challenges requires the participation of all humankind—from high school students, one of whom has developed a potential method for detecting the early stages of pancreatic cancer, to refugees, one of whom has created a school that educates hundreds of girls in a refugee camp. To unearth the next Einstein, we must reach out to all talent globally and give them the resources to participate in solving the challenges of their communities and the challenges of the world. 

For this plenary, our speakers will explore how businesses, governments, and individuals alike can:

  • Support inclusive approaches to innovation—such as open innovation, co-creation, and crowd-sourcing—and democratize the ways in which solutions are developed to tackle global problems
  • Enable those living in resource-limited settings to access education and information, to develop their talents, and to participate in solutions building
  • Ensure the equal participation of women and underserved populations in inclusive innovation, breaking down the barriers that prevent full participation and access to technology

Featured Speakers

Headshot of Deborah Berebichez

Deborah Berebichez

Headshot of Deogratias (Deo) Niyizonkiza

Deogratias (Deo) Niyizonkiza

Session Speakers

Headshot of Besan Abu-Joudeh

Besan Abu-Joudeh

Headshot of Mbwana Alliy

Mbwana Alliy

Headshot of Max Opgenoord

Max Opgenoord

Headshot of Tracy Palandjian

Tracy Palandjian

Headshot of Elsa Sze

Elsa Sze

Headshot of Robert  Desimone

Robert Desimone

Solvers

Headshot of Teemu Suna

Teemu Suna

How can urban communities increase their access to sustainable and resilient food and water sources?

Over half the world’s people now live in cities, and 90 percent of population growth going forwards will be urban. Cities drive innovation and resource-efficient lifestyles, but one third of urban residents also lack key infrastructure. Providing healthy food and safe water in a low-carbon and resilient manner is a key sustainability problem throughout the world, whether in Flint, MI, or in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro. For 2017, Solve will be seeking solutions to the challenge of how urban communities can increase their access to sustainable and resilient food and water sources.

In this working group session, cross-sector leaders and change-makers will discuss how we can:

  • Produce drinkable water or healthy food near the point of consumption in resource- and cost-efficient manners
  • Extend, monitor, and maintain infrastructure for supplying water to urban neighborhoods
  • Improve urban supply chains and equitable market access for nutritious low-carbon food

Session Speakers

Headshot of Raj Kumar

Raj Kumar

Headshot of Lisa Dickson

Lisa Dickson

Headshot of Chelina Odbert

Chelina Odbert

How can disadvantaged youth learn the skills they need to prepare them for the workforce of the future and thrive in the 21st century?

The beginning of the 21st century has been marked by rapid advances in technological innovation—from smartphones and big data to artificial intelligence and machine learning. Today’s generation of young people now face a world in which nearly half of today’s jobs globally—around 2 billion—are at risk of becoming obsolete due to automation and technological advancement in the coming decades. 

A job for life is now a thing of the past. The ability to acquire new skills throughout life, to adapt, and to work flexibly will be of particular importance. Building on Sustainable Development Goal 4 to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all, how can disadvantaged children and young people develop the skills they need to participate in the workforce of the future and thrive in the 21st century?

The Solve community aims to unearth and support innovative solutions to guarantee disadvantaged young people under 24 from low socio-economic (income, wealth, and education) backgrounds are equipped with 21st century skills and prepared for the workforce of the future. In this working group, participants will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Suggest innovative learning technologies to help increase skills development for disadvantaged youth around the world
  • Present new educational models and concepts to improve quality of learning for young people in the 21st century
  • Propose tools and strategies to teach skills that will drive entrepreneurship, critical thinking, and adaptability
  • Identify innovative solutions to ensure equal access and inclusion of boys, girls, and people with disabilities to quality education and skills development

Session Speakers

Headshot of Philipp Schmidt

Philipp Schmidt

Headshot of Oliver Libby

Oliver Libby

Headshot of Nicole Goldin

Nicole Goldin

Headshot of Nick Chedli Carter

Nick Chedli Carter

How can people around the world, including in resource-limited areas, achieve optimal brain health?

Fourteen percent of the global burden of disease is attributed to disorders of the brain: mental, neurological, and substance-use disorders. Depression affects about 4.4 percent of the world’s population, or 322 million people; another 45 million people live with neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s and dementia, and about 3.3 million people die yearly due to alcohol abuse. Treatment for many, especially in low-income countries, can be difficult or impossible to access.

Technology can provide a pathway for introducing more effective, accessible, and scalable treatments for these afflictions, and—perhaps even more importantly—for solutions that empower people to improve their overall brain wellness, which is integral to preventing brain disorders, enhancing brain functionality, and enabling people to live happy and productive lives.

The Solve community aims to unearth and support innovative solutions to improve brain health and fitness for all. In this working group, participants will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Enhance brain fitness, mental wellbeing, and resiliency
  • Enable earlier, more accurate diagnosis of problems
  • Increase access to and efficacy of treatments

Session Speakers

Headshot of Robert  Desimone

Robert Desimone

Paul Varghese

Headshot of Khaliya

Khaliya

How can women and girls of all socio-economic backgrounds use technology to fully participate and prosper in the economy?

Today, limited access to finance, low connectivity, and cultural limitations are some of the enduring barriers that prevent women around the world from taking their rightful place in the economy. Restricted access to this wealth of resources, information, and opportunities not only limits a woman’s chances for equality, but also deprives the marketplace of much-needed talent, pathways for innovation, and financial returns.

While current statistics paint a picture of persistent inequality, technology holds significant potential to close the gender gap and create new and innovative pathways for women to generate income, access financial resources, and connect to the global community. For women and girls to fully reap the benefits of the ‘digital dividend,’ we need to find ways to break the barriers and amplify what works.

The Solve community aims to unearth and support innovative solutions to ensure women and girls can fully participate and prosper in the workforce and the economy. In this working group, participants will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Improve connectivity and technology access for women, particularly in underserved areas
  • Increase women’s financial inclusion through access to digital payment, savings, investment, and insurance
  • Increase opportunities for dignified income generation in nontraditional sectors and through access to new supply chains and new markets
  • Correct for bias and heuristics whether in the workplace or within communities

Session Speakers

Headshot of Kavita Gupta

Kavita Gupta

Headshot of Fiona Bayat-Renoux

Fiona Bayat-Renoux

Headshot of Clare O'Connor

Clare O'Connor

Headshot of Sangeeta Bhatia

Sangeeta Bhatia

How can urban communities increase their access to sustainable and resilient food and water sources?

Over half the world’s people now live in cities, and 90 percent of population growth going forwards will be urban. Cities drive innovation and resource-efficient lifestyles, but one third of urban residents also lack key infrastructure. Providing healthy food and safe water in a low-carbon and resilient manner is a key sustainability problem throughout the world, whether in Flint, MI, or in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro. For 2017, Solve will be seeking solutions to the challenge of how urban communities can increase their access to sustainable and resilient food and water sources.

In this working group session, cross-sector leaders and change-makers will discuss how we can:

  • Produce drinkable water or healthy food near the point of consumption in resource- and cost-efficient manners
  • Extend, monitor, and maintain infrastructure for supplying water to urban neighborhoods
  • Improve urban supply chains and equitable market access for nutritious low-carbon food

Session Speakers

Headshot of Ryan Whalen

Ryan Whalen

How can disadvantaged youth learn the skills they need to prepare them for the workforce of the future and thrive in the 21st century?

The beginning of the 21st century has been marked by rapid advances in technological innovation—from smartphones and big data to artificial intelligence and machine learning. Today’s generation of young people now face a world in which nearly half of today’s jobs globally—around 2 billion—are at risk of becoming obsolete due to automation and technological advancement in the coming decades. 

A job for life is now a thing of the past. The ability to acquire new skills throughout life, to adapt, and to work flexibly will be of particular importance. Building on Sustainable Development Goal 4 to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all, how can disadvantaged children and young people develop the skills they need to participate in the workforce of the future and thrive in the 21st century?

The Solve community aims to unearth and support innovative solutions to guarantee disadvantaged young people under 24 from low socio-economic (income, wealth, and education) backgrounds are equipped with 21st century skills and prepared for the workforce of the future. In this working group, participants will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Suggest innovative learning technologies to help increase skills development for disadvantaged youth around the world
  • Present new educational models and concepts to improve quality of learning for young people in the 21st century
  • Propose tools and strategies to teach skills that will drive entrepreneurship, critical thinking, and adaptability
  • Identify innovative solutions to ensure equal access and inclusion of boys, girls, and people with disabilities to quality education and skills development

Session Speakers

Headshot of Eric Klopfer

Eric Klopfer

M.S. Vijay Kumar

How can people around the world, including in resource-limited areas, achieve optimal brain health?

Fourteen percent of the global burden of disease is attributed to disorders of the brain: mental, neurological, and substance-use disorders. Depression affects about 4.4 percent of the world’s population, or 322 million people; another 45 million people live with neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s and dementia, and about 3.3 million people die yearly due to alcohol abuse. Treatment for many, especially in low-income countries, can be difficult or impossible to access.

Technology can provide a pathway for introducing more effective, accessible, and scalable treatments for these afflictions, and—perhaps even more importantly—for solutions that empower people to improve their overall brain wellness, which is integral to preventing brain disorders, enhancing brain functionality, and enabling people to live happy and productive lives.

The Solve community aims to unearth and support innovative solutions to improve brain health and fitness for all. In this working group, participants will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Enhance brain fitness, mental wellbeing, and resiliency
  • Enable earlier, more accurate diagnosis of problems
  • Increase access to and efficacy of treatments

Session Speakers

Headshot of Fahad Bandar al Saud

Fahad Bandar al Saud

Pooja Bhalla

Headshot of Olivier Oullier

Olivier Oullier

Headshot of Rebecca Brachman

Rebecca Brachman

How can women and girls of all socio-economic backgrounds use technology to fully participate and prosper in the economy?

Today, limited access to finance, low connectivity, and cultural limitations are some of the enduring barriers that prevent women around the world from taking their rightful place in the economy. Restricted access to this wealth of resources, information, and opportunities not only limits a woman’s chances for equality, but also deprives the marketplace of much-needed talent, pathways for innovation, and financial returns.

While current statistics paint a picture of persistent inequality, technology holds significant potential to close the gender gap and create new and innovative pathways for women to generate income, access financial resources, and connect to the global community. For women and girls to fully reap the benefits of the ‘digital dividend,’ we need to find ways to break the barriers and amplify what works.

The Solve community aims to unearth and support innovative solutions to ensure women and girls can fully participate and prosper in the workforce and the economy. In this working group, participants will explore how the Solve community can:

  • Improve connectivity and technology access for women, particularly in underserved areas
  • Increase women’s financial inclusion through access to digital payment, savings, investment, and insurance
  • Increase opportunities for dignified income generation in nontraditional sectors and through access to new supply chains and new markets
  • Correct for bias and heuristics whether in the workplace or within communities

Session Speakers

Headshot of Fereshteh Forough

Fereshteh Forough

Headshot of Clare O'Connor

Clare O'Connor

Headshot of Obi Felten

Obi Felten

Mahatma Gandhi once said that “the future depends on what you do today.” Our current ideas and innovations will shape the world of tomorrow. Technology in particular will drastically alter the lives of the expected 10 billion people on Earth by 2050. For example, it is predicted that 90 percent of the global population will be covered by mobile broadband networks by 2020, and that renewable energy sources could adequately supply up to 80 percent of total U.S. energy generation by 2050. With promising developments on the horizon, how can we seize the opportunities present and leverage the accelerating power of technology to address remaining challenges and achieve a more equitable, sustainable, healthy, and prosperous Earth by 2050?

For this plenary, our speakers will discuss how businesses, governments, and individuals alike can:

  • Imagine the world of tomorrow, and make the right investments today to support its promise
  • Support interventions that reflect long-term thinking, prevention, and greater risk-taking in solution-building across all sectors, rather than focusing on short-term election cycles, profitability and impact
  • Increase R&D for technologies that will redefine health, education, and resource use as we know it—from robotics in telehealth services to distance learning tools for rural communities

Featured Speakers

Headshot of Megan Smith

Megan Smith

Headshot of Marjorie  Yang

Marjorie Yang

Session Speakers

Headshot of Jason  Pontin

Jason Pontin

Headshot of Ken Mulvany

Ken Mulvany

Headshot of Jack Andraka

Jack Andraka

Headshot of Mariela G. Shaker

Mariela G. Shaker

Headshot of Fereshteh Forough

Fereshteh Forough

Headshot of Martin Schmidt

Martin Schmidt

Solvers

Headshot of Rama Chakaki

Rama Chakaki

Headshot of Augusto Ruiz-Tagle

Augusto Ruiz-Tagle

In the coming years, conventional sources of funding for research and innovation may change dramatically as the government alters its spending priorities. Yet, innovations—in sectors like energy and healthcare—are expensive, potentially long, and difficult endeavors.

Will and can the private sector effectively partner with government to move research forward on important innovations like energy, pharmaceuticals, and other deeply scientific areas?

  • Eric Ingersoll, Managing Director, Energy Options Network
  • Joe Lassiter, Senior Fellow, Heinz Professor of Management Practice - Retired, Harvard Business School

Space is limited. Pre-registration is required.


Featured Speakers

Headshot of L. Rafael Reif

L. Rafael Reif

President
Headshot of Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw

Chairperson & Managing Director
Headshot of Ash Carter

Ash Carter

25th Secretary of Defense; MIT Innovation Fellow; Director
Headshot of Yo-Yo Ma

Yo-Yo Ma

Cellist
Headshot of Ernest J. Moniz

Ernest J. Moniz

MIT Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics and Engineering Systems Emeritus and Special Advisor to the MIT President; Co-chairman of the Board of Directors and CEO
Headshot of Ursula M. Burns

Ursula M. Burns

Founding Partner
Headshot of Deborah Berebichez

Deborah Berebichez

Chief Data Scientist, Discovery Channel TV Host
Headshot of Deogratias (Deo) Niyizonkiza

Deogratias (Deo) Niyizonkiza

Founder & CEO
Headshot of Megan Smith

Megan Smith

CEO and Founder
Headshot of Marjorie  Yang

Marjorie Yang

Chairman

Speakers

Headshot of Alex Amouyel

Alex Amouyel

Executive Director
Headshot of Erik Brynjolfsson

Erik Brynjolfsson

Schussel Family Professor & Director
Headshot of Rodney  Brooks

Rodney Brooks

Founder, Chairman, and CTO
Headshot of Ina Fried

Ina Fried

Chief Technology Correspondent
Headshot of Aziza Chaouni

Aziza Chaouni

Principal & Associate Professor
Headshot of Kent Larson

Kent Larson

Director
Headshot of Thierry Déau

Thierry Déau

Founding Partner & CEO
Headshot of Brenna  Nan Schneider

Brenna Nan Schneider

Founder & CEO
Headshot of Olajumoke Adenowo

Olajumoke Adenowo

Architect CEO
Headshot of Andrew Chung

Andrew Chung

Founder & Managing Partner
Headshot of E. Denise Simmons

E. Denise Simmons

Mayor
Headshot of Ian A. Waitz

Ian A. Waitz

Dean, School of Engineering
Headshot of John Fernández

John Fernández

Director
Headshot of Anurudh Ganesan

Anurudh Ganesan

Co-Founder & CEO
Headshot of Pablo Borquez Schwarzbeck

Pablo Borquez Schwarzbeck

CEO & Founder
Headshot of Rita Kimani

Rita Kimani

Co-Founder
Headshot of Doug Warner

Doug Warner

Vice President and Global Head of Tech Vision and Strategy
Headshot of Sanjay Sarma

Sanjay Sarma

Vice President for Open Learning
Headshot of Linda Henry

Linda Henry

Managing Director
Headshot of Besan Abu-Joudeh

Besan Abu-Joudeh

Co-Founder & CEO
Headshot of Mbwana Alliy

Mbwana Alliy

Founder and Managing Partner
Headshot of Max Opgenoord

Max Opgenoord

Team Lead
Headshot of Tracy Palandjian

Tracy Palandjian

Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer
Headshot of Elsa Sze

Elsa Sze

Founder and CEO
Headshot of Robert  Desimone

Robert Desimone

Director
Headshot of Raj Kumar

Raj Kumar

President & Editor-in-Chief
Headshot of Lisa Dickson

Lisa Dickson

Resilience Leader
Headshot of Chelina Odbert

Chelina Odbert

Co-Founder and Executive Director
Headshot of Ryan Whalen

Ryan Whalen

Director
Headshot of Jason  Pontin

Jason Pontin

CEO, Editor in Chief, and Publisher
Headshot of Ken Mulvany

Ken Mulvany

Director & Founder
Headshot of Jack Andraka

Jack Andraka

Researcher
Headshot of Mariela G. Shaker

Mariela G. Shaker

Musician and Motivational Keynote Speaker; Founder and Director
Headshot of Fereshteh Forough

Fereshteh Forough

Founder & CEO
Headshot of Martin Schmidt

Martin Schmidt

Provost
Headshot of Jeffrey Sturchio

Jeffrey Sturchio

President & CEO
Headshot of Ann Aerts

Ann Aerts

Head
Headshot of Ravi Gurumurthy

Ravi Gurumurthy

Chief Innovation Officer
Headshot of Noubar Afeyan

Noubar Afeyan

Co-Founder and Chairman
Headshot of Donna Levin

Donna Levin

Entrepreneur in Residence, Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship
Headshot of Laxman Narasimhan

Laxman Narasimhan

Chief Executive Officer
Headshot of Elizabeth Roscoe

Elizabeth Roscoe

Executive Director
Headshot of Haifa Dia Al-Attia

Haifa Dia Al-Attia

CEO
Headshot of Philipp Schmidt

Philipp Schmidt

Director of Learning Innovation
Headshot of Oliver Libby

Oliver Libby

Chair and Co-Founder
Headshot of Nicole Goldin

Nicole Goldin

Senior Advisor (non-resident), Project on Prosperity and Development
Headshot of Nick Chedli Carter

Nick Chedli Carter

Director of Advocacy
Headshot of Robert  Desimone

Robert Desimone

Director

Paul Varghese

Head, Health Informatics
Headshot of Khaliya

Khaliya

Co-Founder
Headshot of Kavita Gupta

Kavita Gupta

Founding Managing Partner
Headshot of Fiona Bayat-Renoux

Fiona Bayat-Renoux

Senior Advisor & Director of Innovation
Headshot of Clare O'Connor

Clare O'Connor

Staff Writer
Headshot of Sangeeta Bhatia

Sangeeta Bhatia

John J. and Dorothy Wilson Professor
Headshot of Eric Klopfer

Eric Klopfer

Professor and Director of the Scheller Teacher Education Program and The Education Arcade

M.S. Vijay Kumar

Executive Director, J-WEL & Associate Dean of Digital Learning
Headshot of Fahad Bandar al Saud

Fahad Bandar al Saud

Co-Founder, Hello Tomo

Pooja Bhalla

Chief Operating Officer
Headshot of Olivier Oullier

Olivier Oullier

Professor of Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Headshot of Rebecca Brachman

Rebecca Brachman

Runway Fellow
Headshot of Fereshteh Forough

Fereshteh Forough

Founder & CEO
Headshot of Clare O'Connor

Clare O'Connor

Staff Writer
Headshot of Obi Felten

Obi Felten

Head of Getting Moonshots Ready for Contact with the Real World

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